
New UNCTAD dashboard tracks risks across shipping, energy, food and finance as shocks from the Strait of Hormuz spread through the global economy.
What began as a shipping disruption in one of the world’s most critical maritime chokepoints has become a wider development risk.
Since early March, UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has alerted that disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz are hitting far more than energy markets. The Strait carries around one quarter of global seaborne oil trade, as well as significant volumes of liquefied natural gas and fertilisers – goods that feed directly into transport costs, food production and inflation.
The disruption deepened rapidly. Ship transits through the Strait fell by about 95%, while oil and gas prices, tanker freight rates, marine fuel costs and war-risk insurance premiums rose sharply.
By 1 April, UNCTAD warned that the shock was feeding through trade, prices and finance, with developing economies facing weaker currencies, falling stock prices and rising external borrowing costs.
The impact has also moved from gas to grain. UNCTAD’s analysis shows that energy and fertiliser disruptions are increasing risks to food production, supply and prices, especially for countries already exposed to high import bills, debt pressures and limited fiscal space.
To help track these risks, UNCTAD is launching the Strait of Hormuz Dashboard. The platform brings together regularly updated indicators on shipping, food, energy and finance, helping users monitor how shocks are evolving and compare them with past crises such as COVID-19 and the supply disruptions following the start of the war in Ukraine.
The dashboard is designed to show not only individual pressures, but how they can reinforce one another. Higher energy costs can raise fertiliser and food prices. Higher transport costs can push up import bills. Tighter financial conditions can reduce countries’ ability to respond.
UNCTAD’s latest Global Trade Update shows why this matters now: global trade entered 2026 with momentum, but rising fragility – including geopolitical uncertainty, inflationary pressures and higher trade costs – is weighing on developing economies’ prospects for investment, demand and development.


